Police are still searching for an unidentified man who reportedly threatened a stranger outside the Alaska State Capitol with a gun and a baseball bat in the early morning hours of July 16.

The Juneau Police Department recently released video footage related to the incident, captured by two security cameras affixed to the front of the Capitol building on Fourth Street. The video can be viewed online at juneauempire.com.

It only took a federal jury two and a half hours to convict a Wrangell family doctor on child pornography charges.

The 12 Southeast Alaskan jurors hearing the case against Greg Alan Salard announced their guilty verdicts about 1:15 p.m. Tuesday, following closing arguments from attorneys earlier in the morning.

The jury found Salard, 54, guilty of receiving and distributing child pornography. Because they found him guilty of receiving the material, they did not have to consider a third charge — whether he possessed child pornography.

A Southeast Alaska jury on Monday heard the last of the testimony against a Wrangell doctor who is standing trial for receiving, possessing and distributing child pornography.

Federal prosecutors rested their case against Greg Alan Salard after the jury finished hearing from an FBI special agent and two other law enforcement officers who helped execute a search warrant at Salard’s home last October.

A Juneau grand jury was asked to indict Brian Hogan on two felony charges on Friday: First-degree assault and third-degree assault.

Now, Hogan only faces the weaker charge after being accused of setting his girlfriend on fire in what advocates called one of the worst acts of domestic violence in Juneau’s recent history.

The difference between the two counts is huge. First-degree assault is an ‘A’ felony, the most serious, and can be punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Third-degree is a ‘C’ felony, the lowest classification and can only carry up to five years in prison.

An FBI special agent who investigated a Wrangell doctor for possessing child pornography told a jury Thursday that he was still able to recover evidence from the suspect’s computer despite a software cleaning program that was erasing files off the hard drive.

Federal prosecutors told a jury Wednesday that there’s no “sugar-coating” the kind of pornography a Wrangell family doctor searched for on his personal laptop computer while being investigated by undercover federal agents last year.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation seized “hundreds of files” of children being sexually exploited — from videos of toddlers being molested by adult men to minor children being forced to perform sex acts — from Greg Alan Salard’s computer, Assistant U.S. Attorney Leslie Fischer said.